Head to head

Behringer UMC202HD vs Zoom PodTrak P8

A side-by-side look at Behringer UMC202HD and Zoom PodTrak P8 for podcasters: pricing, features, and where each one wins.

Behringer UMC202HD

MIDAS preamps at a price that makes competing brands uncomfortable

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Zoom PodTrak P8

Six XLR inputs, battery power, and a touchscreen - built for ambitious podcasts

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At a glance

Behringer UMC202HDZoom PodTrak P8
Starting priceSee siteSee site
Free planNoNo
Free trialNoNo
Best forBudget-conscious podcasters who want audibly better preamps than most interfaces at this price allowPodcasters who run large panels, record in the field, or need to capture every guest on a separate track without a computer

Key features

Behringer UMC202HD

  • 2 XLR/TRS combo inputs with MIDAS-designed preamps and 48V phantom power
  • 24-bit / 192 kHz converters, 110 dB dynamic range
  • Hi-Z input mode for direct instrument connection
  • USB 2.0 bus-powered, class-compliant
  • Zero-latency direct monitoring
  • Separate headphone and line outputs

Zoom PodTrak P8

  • 6 XLR inputs with up to 70 dB of gain and selectable 48V phantom power
  • 6 independent 3.5 mm headphone outputs with individual level controls
  • 4.3-inch color touchscreen display
  • 9 sound pads with 4 banks (36 total clips)
  • Records up to 13 simultaneous tracks to SD card
  • Battery powered (AA cells), USB audio interface, phone/TRRS input

Pros and cons

Behringer UMC202HD

Pros

  • MIDAS preamp DNA - audible step above cheaper alternatives
  • 192 kHz conversion at an entry-level price
  • Hi-Z switching for guitar direct input
  • Class-compliant - no driver install required

Cons

  • Lighter build quality than Focusrite or SSL equivalents
  • Behringer support less reliable if something goes wrong
  • USB-A only connector

Zoom PodTrak P8

Pros

  • Six XLR inputs - largest input count at this price point
  • Battery operation for field recording without AC power
  • Six independent headphone mixes per guest
  • Touchscreen interface is intuitive for live session management

Cons

  • 16-bit / 44.1 kHz recording only - lower resolution than most interfaces
  • 3.5 mm headphone jacks (not 1/4") - more fragile under heavy use
  • Heavier and bulkier than studio-only interfaces of similar input count

The verdict

Choose Behringer UMC202HD if

Budget-conscious podcasters who want audibly better preamps than most interfaces at this price allow.

Behringer built the UMC202HD around MIDAS preamp circuits - the same company that designs consoles for major touring acts - and sold the result for less than most competitors charge for plastic-chassis interfaces with mediocre preamps. The difference is audible.…

Read the full Behringer UMC202HD review →

Choose Zoom PodTrak P8 if

Podcasters who run large panels, record in the field, or need to capture every guest on a separate track without a computer.

The PodTrak P8 is the device for anyone who has outgrown four-input consoles or needs to record away from a desk. Six XLR inputs means a five-guest roundtable is possible - something almost nothing else in this price range can…

Read the full Zoom PodTrak P8 review →

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